health

Eric Lotke's picture

CAF STAFF

Conservatism Is Dying

Conservatism as we’ve known it since Ronald Reagan is dying, ground down in the desert of Iraq, drowned in the floods of Hurricane Katrina, foreclosed by the housing crisis and poisoned on toys imported from China. more »

Eric Lotke's picture

CAF STAFF

New GAO Report: Extra subsidy makes private Medicare Advantage more expensive than traditional Medicare

The GAO reports that Medicare spends more per beneficiary in private Medicare Advantage plans than it does for beneficiaries in the original Medicare program - a projected $54 billion more from 2009 to 2012. more »

Source
U.S. Government Accountability Office, "MEDICARE ADVANTAGE: Higher Spending Relative to Medicare Fee-for-Service May Not Ensure Lower Out-of-Pocket Costs for Beneficiaries." February 28, 2008. http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d08522t.pdf
Eric Lotke's picture

CAF STAFF

Public health plans more economical than private counterparts

sfgate.com — The latest Associated Press report on health care costs contains some hidden gems. The headline is that health spending increased to $2.1 trillion in 2006, an average of $7,021 per person and 16.1% of the economy.

The first hidden gem relates to the ability of public plans to use their bulk buying power to negotiate lower drug prices. Medicaid does it. Medicare is legally prohibited:

"[U]nder the drug benefit, many of the poorest beneficiaries were moved from Medicaid into Medicare, where private plans administer the drug benefit. Those private plans failed to negotiate discounts as large as those that the states got. Officials said the discounts drug manufacturers were required to give states typically lowered costs by about 30 percent. Meanwhile, the private plans typically negotiated discounts of 5 percent to 10 percent."

The second gem is about the cost of Medicare compared to private plans. It's cheaper:

"Medicare economists said the increase [in spending] occurred because millions of people left traditional Medicare to enroll in private plans subsidized by the government. Medicare's economists said they could not say whether such a transfer led to greater health spending overall in the U.S. But they did note that the government spends about $10,133 per enrollee in the private plans versus about $9,538 per enrollee in traditional Medicare."

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Eric Lotke's picture

CAF STAFF

Public Health Plans More Economical than Private Counterparts

The latest Associated Press report on health care costs contains some hidden gems. The headline is that health spending increased to $2.1 trillion in 2006, an average of $7,021 per person and 16.1 percent of the economy.

The first hidden gem relates to the ability of public plans to use their bulk buying power to negotiate lower drug prices. more »

Source
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2008/01/07/national/w221440S90.DTL
Eric Lotke's picture

CAF STAFF

U.S. Has Highest Rate of Preventable Deaths Among Industrialized Nations

The U.S. has the highest rate of preventable deaths among 19 industrialized nations, and although the U.S. more »

Source
http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?DR_ID=49732